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Highlights of the Tour, photos, videos, sounds, etc. can be found at Best Of Leonard Cohen Tour
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Leonard Cohen's Israel concert sells out in a day - The Associated Press
Leonard Cohen's Israel concert sells out in a day - The Associated Press JERUSALEM — Tickets for a Leonard Cohen concert to benefit Palestinian and Israeli
peace groups sold out in less than a day, an Israeli ticket agent said ...
Shay Quillen: Farewell - San Jose Mercury News
Singer/songwriter Leonard Cohen opens his concert at the Paramount Theatre, Monday, April 13, 2009 in Oakland, Calif. Cohen is touring for ...
Leonard Cohen announces Tampa Bay area tour date - Examiner.com
Although Leonard Cohen's success in America never equaled that of his success abroad, he remains one of the world's most influential songwriters (more than ...
Leonard Cohen to perform for peace - Jerusalem Post
Leonard Cohen to perform for peace - Jerusalem Post All of the net proceeds from Leonard Cohen's September 24 concert at Ramat Gan Stadium will be
earmarked for a newly established fund to ...
Leonard Cohen Announces Second Leg of First US Tour in 15 Years - Rolling Stone
After completing his first US tour in 15 years, Leonard Cohen will trek across the States again this autumn as the Rock & Roll Hall of Famer has announced a ...
An Open Letter To Amnesty International - Auburn Journal
An Open Letter To Amnesty International - Auburn Journal For this reason, I was very troubled to learn that Amnesty International has agreed to manage a fund that
will disburse the proceeds from Leonard Cohen's ...
Rare concert: Leonard Cohen in South Florida - Palm Beach Post
Rare concert: Leonard Cohen in South Florida - Palm Beach Post It's a cliche — a once-in-a-lifetime concert event! — but this time, it may be true. For more
information: www.LeonardCohen.com and www.AEGLive.com.
PHILADELPHIA: Leonard Cohen to perform in one of the Spectrum's ... - Vineland Daily Journal
The incomparable Leonard Cohen will help close the Wachovia Spectrum in Philadelphia when he performs at the legendary arena at 8 pm Thursday, Oct. 22, ...
Maeve Marsden - Australian Stage Online
Then there's the fact that my favourite musician is Leonard Cohen and I was burning to sing some of his songs. And I'd covered a few songs by men when I was ...
Leonard Cohen to give rare Cleveland concert, and more just ... - The Plain Dealer - cleveland.com
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Leonard Cohen’s first album in five years, Live in London, has been released. The 2-CD/26-track set was recorded last July 17 at
London’s O2 Arena. A DVD is also available.
Leonard Rocks
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More Info
Sharon Robinson
Javier Mas
Leif Bodnarchuk
Charley and Hattie Webb
Bruce Rodgers
Roscoe Beck
Wilfred Langmaid
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Speaking Cohen
Concert Reviews, Set List for Oakland, CA
CBC Radio Presents "Ladies and Gentlemen, Mr. Leonard Cohen"
More Reviews of Live In London
Building Leonard Cohen's Backing Band
Playing with Cohen
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I’ve been fascinated by the variety of venues, including outdoor festivals with hastily erected stages, gigantic stadia, intimate halls,
baroque theaters, and the occasional hockey rink, that have hosted concerts during the Leonard Cohen World Tour. Of these, however,
I am most taken with the ancient stages Cohen has played.
A prime exemplar of this category is the Vienne Roman Theater, resonant with romance and beauty and shown to spectacular
advantage in these concert photos by maretschkou.
Built in the first century AD, the original theater seated 13,000, making it one of the largest in the Roman Empire. A concise, interesting
discussion of the structure and its archeological discovery is available at The Ancient Theater At Vienne.
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Leonard Cohen Equipped To Step Into The Ring And Examine Every Inch Of You
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The singer/songwriter/poet is shown here equipped with boxing gloves and stethoscope, pertinent accoutrements to the lyrics of “I’m
Your Man” offered by audience members.2 Photo by Uli.
Leonard Cohen played his first ever concerts in Istanbul on August 5 and 6, 2009. Other than the insertion of “Istanbul” into the lyrics of
“Hallelujah” (i.e., “I did not come to the great city of Istanbul to fool ya”), there is little in these photos or the video to identify this
performance as one that took place in that city.
Yet, knowing that these artifacts did originate in that exotic locale somehow lends them a mysterious, intriguing aura, rendering them
gorgeous and bewitching.
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Venice Concert A World Tour High Point Plus A New Cohen Song Revealed During Sound Check
The Leonard Cohen Venice Concert proved to be as special as its venue, Piazza San Marco, shown in this engaging photo taken by
Eija Arjatsalo. Cohen was confident and in full control, he sang well, and – most significantly – he looked like he was having fun.
My assessment, garnered solely from three YouTube videos of songs performed during the show, is congruent with the comments
posted by Tom Sakic, an especially knowledgeable Cohen fan who attended the Venice show after seeing other World Tour concerts
as a basis for comparison, at LeonardCohenForum:
I don’t know what happened in Venice on Monday, but above the “usual perfection” (that sounds horrible) of the band and
Leonard’s standard superb delivery, there was something in the air, at least when Leonard himself was in question.
Already at the public soundcheck at 6pm he appeared completely in victorious mood (he said “Give them a show!” when he saw
how many people gathered for the soundcheck, and teased us with new song about The Darkness), while on the show he was in
complete command, always few steps before the band and the singers, even little self-ironic in its easiness.
Commanding his own voice to incredible deepness as never before (the voice is deeper after the flu he got at the Weybridge) – and
doing that with the voice consciously; his body on the invisible strings commanded by somebody above doing its own show;
kneeling not only on the first verses of each song but now spending the whole songs on the floor; looking for The Angel’s
instructions (the golden statue of an angel on the top of the St. Marco tower) in Ain’t No Cure for Love, Tower of Song and So Long
Marianne; and with small turns in delivery of some lines and words (every line was lived through), the Venice show launched itself
among the best show Cohen ever gave, reaching its even higher highs on the encores, with the whole St. Mark’s Square standing
with hands in the air and singing out loud So Long Marianne and the chorus verses of Manhattan and Closing Time.
Cohen waved on few occasions to crowds of young people hold up by security in left and right corner of the stage (the barrier
broke down on the encores so those fans where leading in the singing along), going to both corners of the stage to greet them
(probably seeing what’s happening). I enjoyed their solemn and touched smiles and faces while waving to Leonard all the time.
Thus for now; I don’t know what happened there – the band was really happening, Sharon stormed the stage and touched the
golden string in a capella/gospel part of Boogie Street (leaving the audience, at least where I was sitting, in utter amazement),
Javier Mas almost killed us not only with prolonged intro to Who By Fire but bleeding his heart out on all his strings as loud he
could manage (and it was loud!), half-standing above his chair.
Maybe it was Venice, maybe it was Piazza St. Marco – but Leonard himself appeared very keen & ready, and although I cried
through the show in Lucca, which was also energetic and loud as this one (but it was my first), and I saw Royal Albert Hall (which
appears completely academic when compared to the Italian shows) in its immaculate perfection, the show in Venice showed what
means when Leonard Cohen is literally taking a city. And – unlike the mix of the Live in London CD/DVD – it sounded as it should
be – very loud but still clear, every musician being in his/her own tour de force, and every word from Leonard’s lips transparent.
This video tells it all – just how I remember it was! Loud and everybody singing and Leonard totally ready to take Venice!
“So Long, Marianne” continues to be the Leonard Cohen Summer 2009 European Tour go-to song for audience response with the
Venetian crowd booming forth on the chorus and Cohen complimenting the effort with an “Ah, you sing so sweet” (2:45).
Also noteworthy is Cohen’s entry, which is also his return from the magnificent skipping stage dismount documented in the next
section, Leonard Cohen Swings, Skips, Romps Through “Closing Time” In Venice. On the return circuit seen in the next video, Cohen
enters running but midway to the microphone shifts into high amplitude skipping.
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Ongoing readers may recall my recent description of Leonard Cohen In Belfast … Possible Best Skipping Of Tour:
First, note how, at 5:50, Cohen pauses to make the transition from prayerfully saluting the audience to preparing himself for the
floor exercise.
He strikes the classic starting position with his left arm held across his midsection for balance and then simultaneously lifts his right
arm above his head and his right knee to waist height for power. After holding that posture for an instant, he kicks down, attaining
excellent velocity and elevation on his initial thrust, all the while maintaining near-perfect form.
Well, Cohen’s skipping in Belfast was, as noted, excellent, but his skipping in Venice appears to have earned both style and power
points that exceed the Belfast effort.
His wind-up, shown in the screenshot atop this post, is awesome, and the entire skipping sequence (at the end of this video) is
impressive.
And, at the very end of the video, watch Roscoe Beck’s demonstration of fancy hat twirling.3
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A by-product of the singer-songwriter’s expansive mood in Venice appears to have been his semi-public audition of a new song, “The
Darkness,” during the Venice sound check, which was watched by a number of fans.
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These wonderful photos from the July 31, 2009 Leonard Cohen concert in León were taken by Indiana Caba.
The following is a Google translation of Leonard Cohen tiñe León con la amargura de sus plegarias poéticas by Cristina Fanjul,
published in Diario de León on August 8, 2009.4
As a contemporary Lord Byron, with all the beauty and the loser with a burning violin, Leonard Cohen yesterday led thousands of
León to the beauty of some songs which could directly recover, thanks to sin, after years of silence. With his hat as master of
ceremonies, the Canadian poet showed throughout the concert, thanks to the great and deployment issues such as the magic of
Dance me to the end of love (the waltz with the opening scene), The Future, Ain’ t no cure for love or Everybody knows. Leonard
Cohen yesterday became one of the most important cultural events of the city who has lived and Leon Arena was capital for almost
three hours of epic music that shapes a poet to transcend the mud, singing and continues to look for individuality what he
considered unattainable.
Generous and genial, he shared with the audience their hymns and tells how a legendary era of unbridled dreams led him to
venture into the world of religion and philosophy, and the drug Prozac. And all that said, “to conclude that no possible cure for
love”, one of his best songs. Futile freedom of a bird in the wire of a preceding their most famous, Everybody knows. As a messiah
who has lost hope, as a redeemed Poe, claimed in her personal Gethsemane, and before the verses of chant Anthem reminded
that everything has a crack, and this is the only way for the light entering the darkness. Suzanne followed, including his ode to lost
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love, crazy love of youth, which allows blind and go through life with eyes closed. After Boggio street, a statement of principles of a
sinner, then Cohen one of his most beautiful prayers, Hallelujah, that in raising his voice and says that, as he himself says, “one
begins to be wise when he realizes that is very unhappy.” Democracy came after the prayer, a hymn to United States, and
immediately afterwards, I’m your man, a sample of the great pessimist knows laughing, exercising an irony of love and surrender
and submissive absurd. Was almost Ecuador when Leonard Cohen’s concert showed why poetry | a verse recitation was
suspended in the air, as deep as a thousand kisses.
And suddenly, his tribute to Lorca, who was revealed to be profound and popular at the time, who guided him along the road that
leads to poetry. Take this waltz was one of the most memorable moments of the show and prior to the end a new beginning, to
Marianne, First We Take Manhattan, a Closing time. Yesterday, Leonard Cohen has allowed us to cross to the other side, those
dreams were never fulfilled, that of the vanquished that, despite everything, still waiting, the lust for drugs and who share dreams
with the hope of salvation of finding a truth that never-| Like a fisherman king, as the Jew who sang Lorca, halfway between the
East River and the Bronx, as Ruth-| I beg you to stop. Where you go, I will go …
While a significant number of Cohen fans are not fond of “Boogie Street,” a Sharon Robinson – Leonard Cohen collaboration, this
albertnoonan video of Sharon Robinson performing a luscious arrangement of that song at the Lisbon concert is special. If you don’t
enjoy this, you can rest assured that you just don’t like the song and can time your trip to the concession stand or the rest room to
coincide with it during the next concert you attend.
But I warn you, you may find yourself getting off on “Boogie Street.”
It would be difficult to find a more concise and significant assessment of the Lisbon concert than this single sentence I’ve excerpted
from a very personal, subjective, thorough, and delightful discussion of the show by burningviolin at LeonardCohenForum:
I didn’t think any concert could top Dublin but Lisbon was it!
Leonard Cohen – Anthem & Band Intros (Lisbon, July 30, 2009)
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One of the first indisputable signs available to those of us not in attendance that the Dublin shows would be extraordinary was the
video from the Dublin concert featuring one of Cohen’s best performances of “So Long Marianne,” which was even further enhanced by
the Dublin audience singing along (see below). The following video is the same song from a different Dublin concert; the reason for
posting it is Cohen’s sweetly delivered compliment to the audience at about the 34 second mark.
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As part of this small tribute, I’m also happy to be able to post these photos from the Belfast concert, likely to be Cohen’s last
performance in Ireland.
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Cohen’s departure from the stage in Belfast is a clear contender for the Best World Tour Skipping title and is a fine example for the
young, aspiring skippers watching at home. First, note how, at 5:50, Cohen pauses to make the transition from prayerfully saluting the
audience to preparing himself for the floor exercise.
He strikes the classic starting position with his left arm held across his midsection for balance and then simultaneously lifts his right arm
above his head and his right knee to waist height for power. After holding that posture for an instant, he kicks down, attaining excellent
velocity and elevation on his initial thrust, all the while maintaining near-perfect form.
Cohen is especially impressive in the turn near raised platform where the keyboards are located, adding a half-twist not seen before in
this competition. Finally, he continues to accelerate past his exit through the curtain, correcting his tendency in past concerts to slow
his pace a step or two before reaching the curtained area.
The routine is exemplary, displaying challenging, even daring moves, exquisite style, and an unexpected degree of athleticism, given
the competitor’s recent summer cold.
This is a spectacular performance sure to be mentioned in future years wherever fans gather to talk about skipping and one that will be
most difficult to surpass in the remaining European shows or the final 15 concerts in the U.S.
This song features Cohen’s band members and back-up singers eager to demonstrate their skills, an enthusiastically appreciative
audience, and, of course, albertnoonan to capture it on video.
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Leonard Cohen’s blessings at the July 26, 2009 Belfast concert varied from the benedictions he has used at most of his performances,
including his shows in Dublin a few days earlier.
The Belfast blessings were taken from The Priestly Blessing found in Numbers 6:24-26, the prayer to be used by Aaron and his sons
for the blessing of the children of Israel. Many synagogues end their services with this prayer. In Protestant churches, it has come to be
known as The Benediction and often closes church services as a blessing upon the congregation. It is similarly used at weddings as a
blessing upon the bride and groom.
The only essential introductory information about these videos are the following three lines:
Venue: Dublin
Videographer: albertnoonan
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This is a superb performance, and it offers a bonus. As the video begins, Charley Webb (the back-up singer on the viewer’s far left) is
shrugging into her jacket and then, that task accomplished, gets into the rhythm of the choreography with her sister, Hattie, and
Sharon Robinson. As a result of Charley’s shimmy she employs to don her coat, her subsequent hair adjustments, and her
synchronized gyrations in anticipation of the initial chords of “First We Take Manhattan,” I am now officially hot for Charley Webb. (This
may be the first occasion when I’ve been turned on by watching a woman put on rather than removing clothing.) Oh, and that Cohen
fellow also sings after Charley finishes her reverse ecdysis.
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Leonard Cohen’s recitation of “A Thousand Kisses Deep” at the July 21, 2009 Dublin concert includes an additional verse not used in
previous shows.
Most importantly, however, this rendition of “A Thousand Kisses Deep” is resonant and moving.
Leonard Cohen – A 1000 Kisses Deep (Dublin O2, July 20, 2009)
The quality of the camera work and audio by albertnoonan in producing this video earns accolades and appreciation from those of us
not privileged to be in Dublin last night to hear the Leonard Cohen performance of “So Long Marianne” accounted by some who have
attended multiple concerts during the World Tour as the best rendition of the song thus far.
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This is not a video with great production values. As the cameraperson notes, “Sorry for the all the drunk people singing.”
But how could anyone who knows anything about Leonard Cohen pass up the chance to watch him sing “So Long Marianne” to a
concert audience that includes Marianne Ihlen herself?5
Five days after the spectacular show, apparently held in a gale at Weybridge (see below), Leonard Cohen overcame the perfect
weather and blissful setting of Langesund to give, by all accounts, a fine concert.
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The photographer, dorsetbays, who took the shots on this page6 and generously permitted them to be posted at Heck Of A Guy,
summarizes the setting:
Leonard Cohen put on an amazing concert at the Mercedes Benz Arena, Surrey on 11 July 2009. The weather was atrocious,
heavy rain and gale force winds, but the atmosphere was electric.
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Susan Vega
The reports of the relative few who actually arrived at the concert in time to hear the opening act, long time Leonard Cohen collaborator,
Suzanne Vega, indicate she was a class act and in good voice for her ten song set, including Luka, Tom’s Diner, and Pornographer’s
Dream, on her birthday.
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Be assured that the next video is from the correct concert in the inclement weather – the performance of Cohen and his musicians and
the response of the crowd just overwhelm the impact of the wind and rain.
Once Again, No One, No Where Gives Better Blessings Than Leonard Cohen
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Leonard Cohen – Whither Thou Goest and Blessings (Weybridge – July 11, 2009)
Leonard Cohen – Whither Thou Goest and Blessings (Toulouse – July 9, 2009)
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While the reaction of an audience to the occurrence of their city’s name in the lyrics of the performer’s song (even when that usage is
predicated on the necessities of rhyme and meter, let alone when the choice, as is the case in this instance, is fundamental to the
significance of the song) is so predictable as to be deemed inevitable, the excitement demonstrated by the Berliners singing along to
Leonard Cohen’s “First We Take Manhattan” is exhilarating and infectious. The crescendo on “… then we take Berlin” is emotionally
overwhelming.
The camera is a tad shaky, especially at first, but one can hardly fault the contributer, BenLev10, who may have produced a few faulty
frames in trying to capture too much of the performance, audience reaction, and venue (Berlin’s O2 Arena) itself but also produced
some shots that are inspired, including some views of the audience that are atypical of most of Cohen’s concert videos. It is, with
apologies to Browning, one of those “a man’s reach should exceed his grasp, or what’s a heaven for?” things.
“With your permission, I would like to dedicate this concert to the memory of Yasmine …”
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Leonard Cohen dedicated the July 4, 2009 Antwerp Concert to Yasmine (real name: Hilde Rens), a well known Belgian singer-
songwriter and TV presenter, who translated and covered many Leonard Cohen songs as well as performing at the Leonard Cohen
Hydra 2002 Event.
Yasmine took her own life on June 26, 2009, apparently in the wake of a recently ended marriage with Marianne, another Belgian public
figure.7
Yasmine – Dans me
The photo atop this note is from the only page of Yasmine’s web site now accessible.
Following the New York Leonard Cohen Beacon Theatre Concert (February 2009) but prior to realizing that the Cohen concert junket
had become the Tour That Never Ends,8 I began putting together a commemorative video of the event. The idea was that I would finish
the project once the World Tour was over.
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As of today, the Cohen Infinite Tour Loop includes confirmed concert dates through 21 September 2009 with possible venues being
considered after that time.
So, in hopes of posting this video sometime before the Christmas rush, I am proud to present, on the occasion of the end of the
US-Canadian leg and the beginning of the 2009 European leg of the World Tour,
The music is the 1980 version of Leonard Cohen’s “Do I Have To Dance All Night,” an arrangement that has never been released.
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This altogether impressive photo was taken during Leonard Cohen’s July 2, 2009 concert by jarkko and was first posted at
LeonardCohenForum.
During this hiatus between the 2009 North American and Summer European legs of the Tour, I happened onto two outstanding
performances of “I’m Your Man.”
Leonard Cohen – I’m Your Man & A Thousand Kisses Deep – Sydney Jan 2009
Leonard Cohen – I’m Your Man -Radio City Music Hall May 2009
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Fascinating time lapse video of the Red Rocks WebCam, before and during the Leonard Cohen concert on June 4th, 2009.
Chicago Marquee
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I’m still mad for this kind of a striking shot of the marquee at the venue for the Cohen concert. Photo taken by Avi Elkoni, who has
graciously allowed its publication at LeonardCohenSearch.
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I’ve found only one or two other photos (see photos for Radio City Music Hall show) taken from this perspective (otherwise known as the
balcony) of Cohen kneeling, but I’m grateful for every example of this classic image. This and the next two photos were taken by
xrayspx, who has generously licensed these pictures for uses such as this.
The last two photos demonstrate the physicality of Dino Soldo’s style of playing the woodwinds.
While a number of reports of the Boston show competently describe the performance and some nicely evoke the experience of
watching the concert, I am especially taken with the review at Neo-neocon: Leonard Cohen comes to Boston, which offers a perspective
not only of Cohen’s work place within the context of the lives of those in the cohort Neo-neocon and I share but also of the significance
of his music on our consciousness. Excerpts follow:
As I’ve written before, Leonard Cohen is not for everyone (although he’s certainly for me). Some find him boring, some find him
droning, some find him hard to tell apart from Dustin Hoffman until he opens his mouth (although as they’ve both aged, they look a
lot less alike than they used to). But I find him to be one of the most compelling and hypnotic singer-songwriters, poet-musicians
—whatever sort of hyphenated descriptive term you prefer—in the world.
Cohen spent a lot of time last night with his hat on and his eyes closed and his legs bent or even in a full kneel (try doing that
when you’re seventy-four), facing his backup singers or his musicians and singing to them. It sounds as though this would distance
him from the audience, but it didn’t; it’s his way of reaching deep within himself to give the greatest emotional power to each song.
The words are neither more nor less important than the music, and although he’s probably sung each composition hundreds or
even thousands of times, he never seems to be just going through the motions.
For example, when Cohen sang “Suzanne,” one of his earliest songs, he brought thick layers of memory to those of us who had
first heard it back in high school or college in the 60s, from a Leonard Cohen who seemed mature at the time but was only in his
mid-thirties. How did he make it seem so fresh now, singing it as an old man? His voice is far deeper (deeper even than I’d heard it
sound recently in You Tube videos from the current tour—how deep can a man’s voice get and still be heard by the human ear?)
But that’s not the only thing that’s deeper; you can hear all the ache of the intervening years—the hard-won wisdom and the
hard-fought pain—in his phrasing and tone, and as you listen you nod and think of all that you’ve been through in those same
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passing decades.
… it is a tribute to the extraordinary musicality of Cohen and everyone else on the stage that none of the new variations is ever a
disappointment no matter how deeply entrenched in one’s head a beloved original might be. Each new phrasing, each new riff, is a
revelation.
I have just used the word “revelation,” and it points to another characteristic of Cohen’s work: there is a religious undercurrent to it,
even when he’s singing about sex (or maybe especially when he’s singing about sex). How he manages to combine the worldly
and even the world-weary with the ecstatic and the numinous is a mystery, but his music is permeated with this sense.
The full review cam be read at Neo-neocon: Leonard Cohen comes to Boston.
The following four-part video offers excellent visual and audio coverage of representative portions of every song performed at the May
19, 2009 Hamilton concert. The quality of the camera work and editing of enervatingpeople, who uploaded these videos, is exceeded
only by the generosity displayed in sharing this effort with viewers.
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Radio City Music Hall Signet Ring Souvenir & Cohen Photo
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As some viewers have noted, there have been few additions to the Best Of Leonard Cohen World Tour 2008-2009 page since
Coachella.
The Tour, of course, continues and the recent concerts, such as those in Philadelphia, Waterbury, Edmonton, Calgary, and other cities
(including Chicago, the nearest site to my own home) have been, by all reports, as exquisitely performed and as deeply felt by those in
the audience as the shows earlier in the schedule.
The rate at which new material has been added here lately is relatively low because of that schedule. At this point, Cohen has
completed more than 100 concerts with little variation in play lists and monologues. Consequently, good quality videos of most of his
music and chatter have become available. A viewer who can already watch three or four well done concert videos of “Tower Of Song”
on this page gains little by being given the opportunity to see a 5th, 6th, and 7th version. Concert reviews are almost universally positive
but are also almost universally redundant, dampening enthusiasm for posting or reading excerpts.
I am still interested in the novel, unique, and just plain odd Tour elements, which is why portions of this page are devoted to Leonard
Cohen dancing and skipping, the Webb Sisters Cartwheeling, Cohen’s cowboy hat, the unreleased song, “Lullaby,” that has been
added to his concert set, etc. Occasionally, the venue is special enough to warrant attention, which was the case at Coachella (the only
American festival with an overwhelmingly young audience on the Tour schedule) and the first cities played in the US after a 15 year
absence.
There will be new photos, videos, reviews, and such appearing here. The upcoming Tour schedule, for example, includes a concert on
Cohen’s 75th birthday and a performance in Israel that some groups are pressuring Cohen to refuse for political reasons, both of which
will be represented on the Best Of Leonard Cohen World Tour 2008-2009. Some photographer somewhere will take a spectacular shot
or some reviewer will find a new angle for his story that will turn up on this page.
I continue to monitor uploaded videos, newspaper and personal reports on the concerts, and photos of the shows. When the next great
instance from a Leonard Cohen concert shows up in graphic, audio, or textual form, I’ll do my best to display it here.
Leonard Cohen – Waiting for the Miracle and “… 60 Years Old, Just A Kid With A Crazy Dream” Monologue (Seattle, 2009)
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This photo, taken during rehearsals prior to the start of the Tour, raised the inevitable question,
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Leonard Cohen Full Of Classy Contradictions In Vancouver by John Lucas (Straight.com April 20, 2009) is not only an accurate account
of Cohen’s Vancouver performance, but is chock-full of Cohen paradoxes. These excerpts are representative:
The 74-year-old icon is a walking contradiction (and occasionally a skipping-around-the-stage contradiction), part beatific Zen monk
and part Old Testament prophet of doom. The Montreal-born poet’s best work is seemingly best absorbed in dark-side-of-midnight
moments of solitary contemplation, but it somehow comes across just fine in a hockey rink filled with enraptured fans.
[Cohen's line about "being born with the gift of a golden voice is] funny, yes, because Cohen’s weathered croon is no one’s idea of
a heavenly instrument, but it’s also true. Nobody can sing a Leonard Cohen like Leonard Cohen, which he proved with “Hallelujah”.
Thanks to a seemingly endless stream of covers, that mid-’80s tune has become Cohen’s best-known song, even among those
who have never heard him sing it. They should, because, at least on this occasion, the author’s version bests them all, sounding
simultaneously carnal and divine, like two angels fucking. (And if you think I’m being needlessly vulgar, you clearly haven’t seen
the picture on the sleeve of New Skin for the Old Ceremony.) ))
The entire article is a worthwhile read, whether one has a special interest in the Vancouver concert or only a general fascination with
Cohen. It is available at Leonard Cohen Full Of Classy Contradictions In Vancouver.
The folks at Gawker have published Coachella: An Illustrated Nightmare, which comprises a series of, as one would suspect,
nightmarish photos of the goings-on at Coachella 2009 replete with snark-laden captions.
Well, that nightmarish-snarky thing is true except in the case of the last photo in the sequence:
And then an awesome, natty old man showed up to play that song from the Watchmen sex scene. ["Leonard Cohen by
vonlohmann, on Flickr"]
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Searching for photos of Leonard Cohen that also identified the Coachella setting (most photos of Cohen in the desert could have been
taken in London, New York, or Fredericton) I came across two excellent shots at Sharee Rivera’s Live Journal entry, Coachella Was Da
Bomb, documenting her visit to the first day of Coachella 2009.
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Seeing Leonard Cohen in the desert one wonders if they’re just seeing a messianic mirage. In fact, his set on Friday night at
Coachella was not unlike going to church — a notion driven home by the fact that the notoriously chatty crowd remained absolutely
silent during Cohen’s one-hour set except for ‘Hallelujah,’ during which everyone threw their arms in the air and sang in unison. A
cathartic moment during a set full of them as Cohen sang one essential hit after another, including ‘Bird on a Wire,’ ‘I’m Your Man’
and ‘Everybody Knows.’
And, from the Gospel according to The L.A. Times, we find the account of Leonard Cohen’s Spiritual Oasis at Coachella:
He delivered the selections pretty much identically to the L.A. Show, except for the unexpected locale reference humorously
dropped into “Hallelujah”; “I didn’t come to Coachella to fool ya,” a moment that’s about the closest he gets to spontaneity. However
meticulously rehearsed it might have been, “Hallelujah” became an exceptionally powerful communal experience, most of the
onlookers joining in on the chorus like a shared prayer. A religious experience in the desert–who’d have thought?
As the sun goes behind the mountains, a huge crowd has assembled at the side stage to see 74-year-old singer Leonard Cohen. I
know he’s a legend and has unquestionable hipster cachet, but this is crazy:—scrappy-looking kids with punk haircuts are shoving
past me to get better spots. Cohen emerges onto the stage with his nicely-dressed band, himself in a black suit, white shirt, cheeky
bolo tie, and a little fedora, which he doffs for the crowd. The band starts up, quietly, but the other stages have gone silent out of
respect, and the sound is clear as a bell. Cohen drops on one knee to sing the opening bars of “Dance Me to the End of Love.” His
voice starts off a little wobbly, and at one point he seems to fumble a line, but in the chorus he dives for the low notes with gusto,
his rich basso making the girls scream. As he continues, his confidence only seems to grow, and he picks rhythms in the repeating
choruses that intertwine with the backup singers, surprising counterpoints to the straightforward melody already established. He’s
on his knees again, and back up again, and I realize I can’t do that now, and I’m half this guy’s age. “I need to see you naked,” he
sings, and the crowd screams louder.
In closing, the blessings of the Leonard Cohen World Tour Benediction be upon you:
I don’t know when we’ll meet again. Until then, take care of yourselves. May you fall on the side of luck, may you be surrounded by
friends and family, and if none of these is yours, may the blessings find you in your solitude. Thank you so much friends,
goodnight, take care.
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Franz Nicolay
I don’t follow PunkNews.org as well as perhaps I should. Aubin posted an explanatory introduction to the entry on April 30, 200:
In the spirit of full disclosure, I attest to having long been a fan of Franz Nicolay, both in his solo gypsy-punk rock mode and as part of
one of my favorite bands, The Hold Steady. While I may, consequently, carry a bias, there are batches of laudatory reviews of Nicolay
and The Hold Steady attesting to their popularity and the quality of their music.
In the pertinent section of the post, Nicolay is describing his experiences at Coachella, where The Hold Steady have played earlier on
the same day that Leonard Cohen, Morrissey, and Paul McCartney will perform.
In the tour diary itself Nicolay proves himself no sycophant, opening his report of Morrissey’s performance, for example, with this
unambiguous line:
So it pains me to report … that Morrissey, who played next on the main stage, was, and I wish I could come up with a more
eloquent way to put this, a pissy little bitch.
And about the headliner, Paul McCartney, Nicolay’s full report is contained in two brief paragraphs:
On my way to the stage for Cohen’s set, I was stopped by a security guard, as a motorcade of black Escalades pulled up to a gate.
While we waited on the sidewalk, out stepped Paul McCartney, in a baggy grey suit. And red sneakers.
Which I suppose is the kind of thing the richest entertainer in the world can get away with, though two and a half hours of
McCartney was an adult dose. For a guy worth half a billion dollars it was an admirably simple stage show (especially the ukulele
take on “Something”). Except for the flash-pots and fireworks deployed for “Live And Let Die”: a subtle display of the kind of
fuck-you money that brings a full pyro setup for one song.
On that topic – the ridiculous to the sublime, the snowy to the sun-baked, or something to that effect – we played the giant
Coachella festival in a desert polo grounds in southern California three days later, and I saw an object lesson in performance
manners. Perhaps you’ve heard that Leonard Cohen recently suffered a severe financial setback. He spent six years studying in a
Zen monastery, during which time he left his affairs in the hands of a personal manager – who took him for five million dollars,
essentially his life savings. So, at 74, he’s back on the road, and a more gracious performance I’ve never seen. All ten or twenty
thousand people waiting for him on a second stage, waited in a hushed silence, like a church service. And indeed, one of the
notable details was that this was the quietest PA sound I’ve ever seen at a festival show, so the religious atmosphere held, up to a
really chilling mass singalong to “Hallelujah”. One detail that really pleased me was that, every time a member of the band took a
solo, he removed his fedora and held it over his heart for the duration, as a gesture of respect.
Leonard Cohen’s Coachella Performances – “Hallelujah” and “The Future” Now Online
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From Leonard Cohen’s February 20, 2009 interview with the LA Times,10,
“We’d played festivals in the past, and I’m not crazy about the setup. You’re on a roster with a whole lot of other people. You don’t
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have the evening. I like to be in a room with people for three hours, have a beginning, middle and an end. We can’t do our whole
set, it’s not our rhythm. But we have heard it’s a special hospitality there. We’ll play our best and look forward to it.”
Below are gathered a few reviews to determine how Leonard Cohen fared at Coachella. At the risk of dissipating the suspense, I am
compelled to say, “Leonard, not to worry.”
1. Leonard Cohen
2. My Bloody Valentine
3. Yeah Yeah Yeahs
4. TV on the Radio
5. Paul McCartney
6. The Hold Steady
7. Bob Mould Band
8. The Cure
9. Henry Rollins
10. Fucked Up (w/ No Age)
There’s no question of Leonard Cohen’s Friday evening set being the finest of the weekend—his otherworldly baritone sheathed in
a ravaged rasp led the massive Outdoor Theatre crowd into the weekend’s most cathartic, devastatingly human moments of artistry
and poetics, from the perfect opening lines of “Bird on a Wire” to his closing audience singalong of the immortal “Hallelujah,”
performed just as a blood-red sun sank deep into a jagged, palm tree’d horizon and left the sky black. It was nothing short of
magic.
WERS Music – My Weekend at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival
3. Leonard Cohen11
At the ripe age of 74, Leonard Cohen is still able to prove to the masses that he has no intentions of taking off his hat just yet. With
the support of a classily dressed band, Cohen led the crowd through a smoky and nostalgic set. The surreal nature of hearing the
Poet of Rock and Roll himself sing “Hallelujah” in a venue that few had expected he ever would perform was truly powerful. His wit
and charm have only increased as the years have gone by, keeping his work relevant and groundbreaking to this very day.
My personal high, however, I suspect is an encounter held in equally high regard by thousands more. The incredible version of
“Hallelujah,” with which Leonard Cohen stunned the already rapt crowd before him, is a Coachella moment like no other. Along
with McCartney’s performance in total, it will undoubtedly turn up in best-ever talk for years to come.
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Headcount – Coachella, Cohen & Chris Isaak Make Life Worth Living
It is not often (or ever, really) during a concert review that I get teary and comment out loud, “Oh my god!” but the coverage of Best
Set: Leonard Cohen tore at my insides. Coachella, that evergrowing-in-popularity music and arts festival in Indio, Ca, was this
weekend. Spin has a nice recap of the bests and worsts from all three days, including Best Personality (Morrissey), Best Encore
(Paul McCartney) and Worst Stage Banter (We Are Scientists), among many others. I’m not sure if my emotional reaction to Best
Set was to the report of a crowd singing back to Cohen in delight, Cohen’s tearful response to the singing, the combination of the
two or if I just have a special place in my heart for euphoric old men. Whatever the case, the live performance and crowd interaction
seemed magical.
In that Los Angeles Times article mentioned at the first of this post, Cohen concluded his comments about Coachella by segueing, as
reported by the interviewer, into an
… extended explanation of where the stage magic lies for him, the sweet spot between the practiced and the unexpected. Then,
unhappy with the long route to an answer, the poet shrugged and took a four-word path: “There is a flicker.”
Cohen In Context
A review of the April 13, 2009 Oakland concert, Leonard Cohen’s Perfect Offering by Gary Kamiya, is online at Salon.com It’s an
interesting perspective, placing this show in the context of past tours and focusing not only on the performance but also on the notion
of Cohen dealing with old age without self-delusion, false bravado, or fearfulness.
I’ve excerpted passages in hopes of convincing viewers that the entire piece is worth perusal.
For the people fortunate enough to see Leonard Cohen on his current national tour, as I did Monday night at Oakland, Calif.’s
Paramount Theater, the world is a bigger, deeper, older, more bitter and radiant place. Every Cohen performance is an epic event.
And in his three-hour-plus performance, part of his first tour in 15 years, the great songwriter, poet and novelist once again used
his powerful body of work to create, for one night, a theater of his life, a public confession so intimate, complex, combative and
profound that it felt as much like prayer as performance. At the end of the evening, as the audience floated out, still transported to
whatever unknown inner place his words and music had carried them, you could almost feel a palpable sense of collective
gratitude that such artistry still exists in a weary world — that Leonard Cohen is still around.
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For those of us still hiding from the revenges planned by the whirligig of time, it can be hard to look. This is the fourth or fifth time
I’ve seen Cohen perform. The first time was sometime in the 1970s — it’s been so long I don’t remember exactly. The last was on
his mid-’90s tour, during the remarkable career renaissance spurred by his superb 1988 album, “I’m Your Man.” In a stock line he
uses in every show, but which surely brings down the house every time, Cohen noted that the last time he performed was 14 or 15
years ago, then deadpanned, “I was 60 years old. Just a crazy kid with a dream.” In those 14 years, Cohen went from being a
brilliantly sardonic middle-aged man (”Now my friends are gone and my hair is gray/ I ache in the places where I used to play”) to a
brilliantly sardonic old man. In his black suit and fedora, he looks like a cross between an aging hipster and a retired Jewish
haberdasher, with a little John Updike thrown in. It’s a cool look, and Cohen is trim and spry (in a delightful touch, he skipped off
the stage at end of each set), but there’s no hiding the fact that the golden boy is gone and won’t come back.
But, of course, Cohen knows this, and talks about it, and plays with it, and interrogates it. At one point in his second set, he said
that he’d been working out, and slyly opened his suit jacket to reveal his (flat) stomach. “But it’s too late,” he said. And then, after a
beat: “It’s always been too late.” Old age, like everything else for Cohen, is a curiosity to be investigated. It’s inescapable, and yet in
a certain sense it can be overcome. During his memorable version of “I’m Your Man,” which like all of his unabashed love songs
falls like a redemptive rain after the caustic romantic pessimism of much of his other work, he made one of his characteristic,
intriguing tweaks to his lyrics: following the line, “If you want another kind of lover,” he changed the original “I’ll wear a mask for
you” to “I’ll wear an old man’s mask for you.” Cohen’s point seemed to be that his old age is real, but it is also a mask, and that
beneath it, the same youthful fire of passion and devotion burns. In fact, maybe it burns higher and hotter, as he gets closer to
what he calls “closing time.” It certainly felt like that Monday night.
These photos by Aki Gibbons , shot from the seating area of the Oakland Paramount Theatre rather than from onstage or the apron of
the stage, impressively evoke the sense of the venue.
These two photos (click on images for better viewing), taken by gussifer | thecolorawesome.com, are from the April 14, 2009 Leonard
Cohen Concert in Oakland. I’m especially taken with the marquee shot (I have a small town boy’s fascination with marquees) above and
with the photo below, in part because it shows the Webb Sisters in full flip mode (for video of Webb Sisters cartwheeling, see “Webb
Sisters Cartwheel From Oakland Into Your Hearts” directly following this section and for the evolution of this program segment, see the
section below headed “White Man Dancing”).
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A quality video of the White Girls Dancing, Synchronized Cartwheel Modification, an obligatory floor exercise in contemporary Leonard
Cohen concerts, has finally shown up on YouTube.
The setting is the Paramount Theater in Oakland, California. Leonard Cohen is midway through his performance of “The Future.” The
camera is focused on Cohen while he sings, “There’ll be phantoms / There’ll be fires on the road,” and moves into his “White man
dancing” choreography.
As Cohen sings “You’ll see a woman / hanging upside down,” the camera pans out, capturing the full stage contingent: Leonard
Cohen, the band, and the three backup singers.
On “her features covered by her fallen gown,” the Webb Sisters remove their jackets.
And, just as Cohen growls, “Yeah, the white girls dancin’,” Charlie and Hattie12 turn, execute simultaneous cartwheels to enthusiastic
applause from a seemingly surprised (apparently non-Heck Of A Guy reading) audience, and return to their places alongside Sharon
Robinson.
And it’s all on camera. 13 (For a still photo of the cartwheels, see section directly above this one, labeled “More Pix From Oakland.” For
the evolution of this program segment, see the section below headed “White Man Dancing.”)
Oh heck, it’s worth seeing again, if only to judge whether the Webb Sisters’ gymnastic skills have progressed. This sequence is from
the Ottawa concert in May 2009.
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A video of Leonard Cohen singing “Lullaby,” his new, unreleased song is now online.
Note: The scene on the video screen is fixed and serves only as background to the audio recording of the song.
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Leonard Cohen Makes Sublime Magic in L.A. by Ben Wener (The Orange County Register , April 11, 2009) is an outstanding review of
Leonard Cohen’s April 10, 2009 Nokia concert, nicely blending the writer’s personal perspective with reporting of the performance
itself. These excerpts are representative:
Like a lot of Gen-X’ers, I initially noticed his chilling tone and jazz-folk style in movies, for which his noir sound is ideal. First there
was the zinger-rich “Everybody Knows” in “Pump up the Volume” (1990). Then came the apocalyptic triptych (including “The
Future,” inspired by the L.A. riots) that Oliver Stone used to great effect in “Natural Born Killers” in 1994, the same year so many of
us first heard Jeff Buckley’s heavenly, heartbreaking rendition of one of Cohen’s greatest achievements, the oft-revived “Hallelujah.”
Later I saw Robert Altman’s masterpiece “McCabe & Mrs. Miller” (1971), a frontier Western like no other, with a sparse but resonant
score comprised entirely of pieces from the bard’s 1967 debut, “Songs of Leonard Cohen.” Only then, hearing his tales of “some
Joseph looking for a manger” and finding comfort with “Sisters of Mercy,” did I begin to instinctively grasp the magnetic pull of
Cohen’s music: It creeps up on you and lingers. Once it’s in your soul, it never leaves.
… There’s the wizened doomsayer of “The Future” (he’s seen it, and it’s murder) or “Everybody Knows,” perfectly embodied in
Cohen’s typical fashion of black suit, gray shirt, bolo tie, Fedora hat hiding his eyes like a spy except for when he doffs it to give
deep bows to the crowd or his exceptional musicians. (Standouts from his uniformly excellent nine-member ensemble: the frantic
but liquid fretwork of Javier Mas on the 12-string banduria, the supple soloing of guitarist Bob Metzger, and the subtly dazzling
detailing of Neil Larsen on Hammond B-3 organ.)
Bolstered by such nuanced support, Cohen can get so caught up in the moment that at times he’ll wiggle on the balls of his feet
with his shoulders hunched up, like an elderly Blues Brother, or drop to his knees to underscore a dramatic point. Yet all the while
he retains the stoic air of a private detective plucked from another era and plopped into chaotic modern times – more like the
character Lemmy Caution lost in Godard’s dystopia “Alphaville” than Bogart in “The Big Sleep.”
The entire piece is well worth reading. That link is Leonard Cohen Makes Sublime Magic in L.A.
And for those of you who have not yet heard the new song, “Lullaby,” you are in for a real treat! The between-songs addresses to
the audience were pretty much recycled from the earlier tour (as I’ve gathered from the recordings of the London and the Beacon
shows), but they still felt authentic. Wearing a cowboy hat to perform the almost bluesy “I Tried to Leave You” did seem like
a unique-to-Texas touch… [emphasis mine]
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The video of “I’m Your Man” from the Leonard Cohen Nokia Theatre Concert (Grand Prairie/Dallas) is absent the first and last fractions
of the song but does benefit from good focus, a steady hand (or competent electronic stabilization), and decent quality sound.
The best received moment of “I’m Your Man,” comes at about the 1:10 mark when Roscoe Beck, playing the bass guitar, echoes
Cohen’s elongated, plaintive “Please.”
There is also a brief solo by Dino Soldo, perhaps better known to aficionados of Cohen’s band introductions as “The Master Of Wind,” a
title that could launch a thousand puns. Some critics deride his contributions to Cohen’s performance as superfluous at best and often
distracting. I admit to enjoying the semi-exotic effect of his instruments.14
I also confess that the first time I saw his photo (that’s Dino on your right in the above photo), I thought he might have been hired as
Leonard’s bodyguard.
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“A Thousand Kisses Deep” also starts a few seconds into the recitation, and its production values are not up to the standards of the “I’m
Your Man” video, but – well, I really like this presentation of the poem and now prefer it to the song of the same title.
Readers unfamiliar with the poem may benefit from the provision of those missing lines from the video of “A Thousand Kisses Deep.”
The first words Cohen speaks on the video are
The two lines preceding those, if Cohen used the words of his poem from the Book Of Longing which he has in other venues on the
World Tour,15 are
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While the opening to Concert Review: Leonard Cohen at Nokia Theatre by Mandi Collier (see below) may be the most inspired lines of
the piece, the rest of the review is reassuring to Cohen fans although it breaks no new ground.
Friday night, Nokia Theatre was transformed from a mid-sized, 6,000 capacity venue, to an old-school jazz lounge. With the
mezzanine closed and the blue lights low, the ambiance was set for a night dedicated to songwriting legend Leonard Cohen.
Leonard Cohen Famous Blue Raincoat Dallas 2009 from Mr. Luna on Vimeo.
Leonard Cohen Performs Unreleased Song in Austin Concerts April 1 & 2, 2009
The concerts were routinely superb. In addition, however, the Austin shows marked the first appearance of new or unreleased music in
any of the concerts of this tour – which may or may not be significant.
Among the songs played as part of the encore was “Lullaby,”16 the song Cohen discussed in his February 20, 2009 interview with
Rolling Stone.17
The introduction of this song could presage development of the long awaited album of new Leonard Cohen songs that has been the
subject of discussion since at least as long ago as June 2006.18
Historically, however, Cohen has sometimes performed unreleased music in his concerts that was never to be issued as part of an
album. An excellent example of this phenomenon would be one of my personal favorites, “Do I Have To Dance All Night,”19 which was
frequently played as the final song of concerts for a couple of years and was issued in Europe as a 45 rpm single but was never
released in the US or as part of an album.
For now, the addition of “Lullaby” to the current concert set list is a “how about that” sort of thing that bears monitoring.
Update: For more about “Lullaby” see The Leonard Cohen 2009 Austin Concert below.
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The Austin concert was dramatically captured in these photos from Laura Lea Nalle. Accompanying theses images is a review of the
performance that is striking both for the quality of its assessments and the thoroughness of its coverage.
Photos and excerpted text by Laura Lea Nalle. More pictures of the concert and the complete review can be found at the link.
Dino Soldo
… there are two particularly exceptional highlights – Spanish guitar virtuoso Javier Mas and the young master of multiple brass and
woodwind instruments Dino Soldo. Mas is undeniably sophisticated and inspired in his instrumentation, with his exotic rhythms and
sounds of traditional Spanish string instruments weaving seamlessly throughout Cohen’s compositions with a rare and awe
inspiring sensibility. Soldo’s range in terms of his apparent musical and spiritual depth and his mastery of multiple instruments is
astonishing; his presence on stage outshines even the brightest of his already brilliant peers; and his saxophone solos are an
occasion to lose yourself, just so he can lead you back again.
… Soldo opens “No Cure For Love” with a beautiful tenor sax solo. He is an electrifying talent, effortlessly switching from tenor
saxophone to an electric wind instrument, to chromatic harmonica, to keyboards and backup vocals, to bassoon and bass clarinet,
all while dancing and moving to the music with a look of divine possession on his face.
After intermission, Cohen skips back onto the stage to take his place behind his keyboard for “Tower of Song,” accompanied only
by a sampler, the Webb sisters and Sharon Robinson on vocals, and Larsen on the B-3. With the push of a button, Cohen starts
the song and then plays a charmingly clunky keyboard solo. The crowd cheers wildly, to which he replies, “You are very kind.”
Cohen pleads to the women to keep going with their angelic “doo dum dum dum da doo dum dum’s.” “Don’t stop,” he says, “Oh
please, don’t stop, I’m not ready to go on to the next thing. [crowd laughs] Ahhh sing me down to sleep angels, sing me through
the bitter morning. I am gathering myself, we’re all gathering ourselves, we are all healing ourselves, it’s almost done,” to which the
ladies kindly oblige until Cohen proclaims, “We are healed, thank you.”
While no video or audio recording of the recently added “Lullaby” has been found, Ms Nalle’s review provides a thorough and evocative
description:
Then we hear the beginnings of a very special debut of a new unreleased song, “Lullaby” which is a down tempo tune with a triplet
feel that weaves an exquisite dance of slide guitar, harmonica, and B-3 while Cohen croons, “When it’s much too late, and we’ve
taken our stand, when they call out your name, we’ll go hand in hand. If your heart is torn, who can wonder why? If the night is
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And, no one closes with a more heartfelt benediction than Leonard Cohen:
“I don’t know when we’ll meet again. Until then, take care of yourselves. May you fall on the side of luck, may you be surrounded
by friends and family, and if none of these is yours, may the blessings find you in your solitude. Thank you so much friends,
goodnight, take care.”
Leonard Cohen July 17, 2008 O2 Arena Concert Becomes Leonard Cohen: Live In London Album
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Leonard Cohen’s first album in five years, Live in London, will be released on March 31. The 2-CD/26-track set was recorded last July
17 at London’s O2 Arena. A DVD will be released on the same day.
Pre-Release Videos
Update: As indicated, the pre-release videos were available for a limited time and are no longer accessible.
Hallelujah
Suzanne (Amazon)
Montage Of Excerpts (Sony)
Pre-Release Webcasts
Update: As indicated, the pre-release webcasts were available for a limited time and are no longer accessible.
CBC: From March 24 to March 30, the CBC offers audio streaming of all tracks of Cohen’s upcoming Live In London release at
CBC Spotlight
NPR: NPR Music will stream the entire Leonard Cohen Live In London album from 11:59 p.m. March 23 until March 31 at NPR
First Listen
From the beginning of the World Tour on May 11, 2008 until February 20, 2009, Leonard Cohen had granted only one interview, a wide
ranging affair which took place June 4, 2008 at Hamilton Place.20 The day after the Beacon Theatre concert, however, at least three
major newspapers, The New York Times, The Globe and Mail, and the LA Times, lined up for serial interviews with Leonard Cohen at
the Warwick Hotel.
The best of the batch (so far) is Leonard Cohen reborn in the U.S.A. by Geoff Boucher at Pop & Hiss, the L.A. Times music blog. It
covers Cohen’s career and his current role in pop music in depth and takes an especially insightful look at Cohen’s perspective on his
legacy. It also offers an unusually accurate portrait of Cohen’s sojourn at a Zen monastery.
Even when Pop and Hiss plays up the local angle, it does so in an interesting way. The discussion of Cohen’s participation at
Coachella, for example, centers around his concern that the venue presents disadvantages compared to typical concert halls.
“We’d played festivals in the past, and I’m not crazy about the setup. You’re on a roster with a whole lot of other people. You don’t
have the evening. I like to be in a room with people for three hours, have a beginning, middle and an end. We can’t do our whole
set, it’s not our rhythm. But we have heard it’s a special hospitality there. We’ll play our best and look forward to it.”
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… extended explanation of where the stage magic lies for him, the sweet spot between the practiced and the unexpected. Then,
unhappy with the long route to an answer, the poet shrugged and took a four-word path: “There is a flicker.”
The entire article is a worthwhile read, but take special care not to miss the last section, “No fretting over his legacy,” which is simply
outstanding.
This LA Times interview can be found at Leonard Cohen reborn in the U.S.A..
Roscoe Beck, the Tour’s Musical Director, provides an interesting point of view on Cohen’s well known predilection for improvisation and
on the spot adaption of the programs:
Cohen likes to feel the mood in a room and react, in a process he says is almost spiritual. Which is why, as his music director and
bassist Roscoe Beck explained a couple of hours before the show, Cohen tries to leave himself open to momentary whims onstage.
“It’s heads-up at all times,” said Beck, who has played with Cohen since 1979 and put together the band for the current tour. “We
may land on a chord and he just may feel that it’s not time to come in singing yet, just emotionally it’s a nice moment, and he’ll
decide to extend that moment another bar. We have to be ready for that, we have to be ready for anything. A lyric change, an
added bar, a different song.”
As is often the case, Leonard Cohen transforms the same overdone topics into worthwhile reading. He comments, for example, on the
process of touring:
“The response has been very, very, very hospitable, and it’s been a generally very nourishing experience,” Cohen begins, slowly.
“We’ve been all over the world, and you know, one is never sure that it’s going to work again. You’re never sure from concert to
concert, actually, because there’s some part of it you don’t command.”
During the recounting of his financial woes, Cohen ruefully recalls guidance received from an earlier adviser:
He leans back and recalls a moment four decades past. “When I first went down to New York from Montreal to pursue some sort of
career,” he says, “my mother, who I always thought was kind of naive – she was Russian, her English was imperfect – she said to
me, ‘Leonard, you be careful of those people down there. They’re not like us.’ And of course, I didn’t say anything to disrespect,
she was my mother, but in my mind I thought, ‘Mother, you know, I’m not a child.’ I was 32, I’d been around the block a few times.”
He turns to face you, and a lopsided smile wafts across his lips. “But she was right. She was right.”
The final paragraph summarizes Cohen’s perspective on performing concerts on this tour at age 74:
Somehow, just in the nature of things, you know, the disappointments accumulate, and the obstacles multiply and you sense the
destruction of your body, and your mind, and you feel here is the last arena – ‘arena’ is too big, the last boxing ring, or the last
Ouija board, where you can examine some of the ideas that have intrigued you. That have seized you, really.
The complete Globe and Mail interview is available at Coffee and Candour with Cohen.
The day after his first American concert in more than 15 years, Leonard Cohen sat in a Manhattan hotel suite warily submitting to
an interviewer’s questions, including one about the music in his laptop’s iTunes. In response, he played a klezmer-style Hebrew
hymn, then followed it by singing along with one of George Jones’s weepy country morality tales.
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That is the beginning of The NY Times article. Most of the interview consists of the standard Leonard Cohen article items (e.g., Cohen’s
financial losses, his Zen retreat, the US and Canada tour dates, his age and his energy, the songs favored in his concert sets, … ). The
only arguably new information I can find follows:
Mr. Cohen said he hoped to make a new record when the tour ends, and offered to play one of his newer compositions. Tentatively
called “Amen,” it features a Farfisa-style keyboard, a trumpetlike solo played by Mr. Cohen on his synthesizer and lyrics like this:
“Tell me again when the filth of the butcher is washed in the blood of the lamb.”
The full interview, including a portion about Zen and Judaism captured on an audio recording, can be found at Leonard Cohen Returns
to the Road, for Reasons Both Practical and Spiritual.
The best photos of the February 19, 2009 concert, including the marquee shot shown above, are the Stereogum series of 20 photos by
Ryan Muir found at Leonard Cohen @ Beacon Theater.
These shots by Jean @ Renovation Therapy are not only excellent in quality but are also taken from an intriguing angle. (Click on
images to enlarge)
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Also recommended are those by Ricky Chapman at Paste and the shots by Christopher Owyoung at Featured Photos: Leonard Cohen
at the Beacon Theatre, which include this proof that Leonard Cohen – and perhaps only Leonard Cohen, can come off as elegantly
attired while wearing a bolo tie.
The best reviews (in this case, “best reviews” means the most thoughtful comments about the concert rather than chauvinistic preening
about Leonard Cohen being scheduled to appear in the city from which the review originates) follow:
Pop Music’s Perpetual Old Man, Now 74, Back on the Road NY Times
Leonard Cohen Returns to U.S. Stage Rolling Stone
Still Your Man: Leonard Cohen Takes Back Manhattan Paste
Leonard Cohen Variety
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Update: As indicated, the NPR pre-release webcast was available for a limited time and is no longer accessible.
The NPR offering, Leonard Cohen, Live At The Beacon Theatre by Bob Boilen includes not only a decent overview (I suggest
supplementing this piece with Boilen’s insightful blog posting about the concert, Musings: Leonard Cohen Live In NYC) but also a
webcast of the performance. The entire Leonard Cohen Concert performed Feb 19, 2009 in New York can be heard from Feb 26 to
March 26, 2009 at NPR Webcast – Leonard Cohen Beacon
Theatre Concert. This information is also available in the right sidebar under the heading, “NPR Webcast of Leonard Cohen NYC
Concert.”
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Tower Of Song has repeatedly been one of the best received songs during the Tour and appears to be the one, judging from his facial
expressions and his animation, that Leonard Cohen most enjoys performing. Because it is crammed with humorous moments and
because it often follows directly after Leonard Cohen’s introductory comments to the crowd (which I wanted to capture), I have been
unable to find a single video that captures all the important aspects of the presentation. It has required, in fact, portions of 3 different
videos to do it justice.
1. Leonard Cohen – Just a kid with a crazy dream … pharmaceutical recitation21 … but cheerfulness kept
breaking through Introduction and Don’t be alarmed, I’m going to start up this machine Lead-in To Tower Of
Song (Geneva. October 27, 2008)
2. Leonard Cohen – Most Expressive Version Of Tower Of Song (Sofiero Sweden, July 3, 2008)
Cohen’s first words (drowned out in applause) are “No hands.” Also lost in the crowd’s response to his keyboard solo at 1:30-2:00 is his
acknowledgment “You’re very kind.” Also of note: hat doff at “hair has turned gray,” audience singing along and wildly applauding “I
was born like this, I had no choice/ I was born with the gift of a golden voice.” (starts about 2:10), Cohen points to head in concert with
the line, “You see, I hear these funny voices” (about 3:27).
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3. Leonard Cohen – Ending Of Tower Of Song With Answer To The Timeless Question (Lisboa Portugal, July
20, 2008)
In the second half of the North American leg of the tour, Leonard Cohen began routinely using a variety of endings rather than the
straightforward answer to the timeless question lines.22 The words vary but the mood and sentiment are similar. This example from the
Seattle concert is instructive.
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Excerpt: The elements of the Leonard Cohen World Tour, Leonard Cohen himself, current support act Paul Kelly, promoters AEGLive
UK and the Frontier Touring Company are donating $200,000 (£90,000) to help victims of the bushfires that have swept across Victoria
in Australia.
Leonard has loved his time in Australia on this tour and is shocked and deeply saddened by the news of the fires. Leonard, Paul, their
touring parties and everyone at AEGLive UK and the Frontier Touring Company wish to extend their heartfelt sympathies to those that
have suffered the loss of loved ones or their homes through this terrible tragedy.”
From Review: Leonard Cohen at Vector Arena By Russell Baillie (New Zealand Herald. Jan 23, 2009):
Somehow, Cohen’s ensemble, a sort of gypsy-soul rock-noir cabaret outfit dressed, as was their fedora-ed double-breasted leader
like particularly stylish members of the French Resistance, were able to shrink the vastness of the venue down to the intimate scale
of the music.
Those lines were the inspiration for this montage focusing on Leonard Cohen’s musicians from some of my favorite photos of the
Leonard Cohen World Tour concerts.23 (Click on graphic to enlarge image.)
This video from the 2008 Leonard Cohen Manchester Concert not only identifies the members of the band and the backup singers but
also demonstrates Cohen’s respect for his musicians.
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Leonard Cohen, a 74 year old entertainer with a self-admitted history of significant tobacco, alcohol, and illicit pharmaceutical use,
maintained a tour schedule through 2008 that began with 22 concerts in 30 days (May 11 – June 9). Then, after 4 day break for travel,
this so-called tour resumed on June 13th in Europe with 7 concerts in the first 8 days. Oh, and from September 21-November 30,
Leonard Cohen allegedly performed 34 concerts in 28 cities across 15 countries.24
Nor are these concerts easy-going, ritualistic affairs, the purpose of which is no more than to allow fans to pay homage to a once-great
entertainer. The newspaper reports describe an entirely different kind of event.
… Leonard Cohen surprised and delighted his audience at the BIC last night (Tuesday) by literally sprinting onto the stage and
performing a three hour show.
Like a surreal gangster in double-breasted suit and trademark Fedora, Leonard Cohen skipped on to the stage to a deafening and
reverential welcome at the Brighton Centre.
After a seemingly endless string of encores (with Cohen skipping on and off stage between each) it’s obvious that Leonard Cohen
has finally come to enjoy life and the songs that he has written that have touched so many.
Even more impressive is watching one of these exercises – note Cohen’s exit and re-entrance at the end of this encore presentation of
First We Take Manhattan at the O2 in London on November 18, 2008.
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The concerts have featured Cohen not only running, skipping, and performing “high kicks,” but also illustrating the “white man dancing”
lyrics of “The Future,” as demonstrated in the videos below.28
In the first part of the tour, the dance was a measured shuffle, carefully executed.
Sometime during the next two months, the dance became more adventuresome.
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At some point in the Tour, the second “white man dancin’” became “white girls dancin’.”
Again, at first the choreography was rather prim. Keep your eyes on the Webb Sisters at the far left side of the stage.
As time passed and the future became more imminent, things started to slide, slide in all directions.
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While less clear than the preceding shot, the final video (in which the camera is actually focused on a giant video screen beside the
stage) does include the full sequence of the same moves.
For an excellent still photo and a high quality video of the cartwheels, see above sections headed “More Pix From Oakland” and “Webb
Sisters Cartwheel From Oakland Into Your Hearts.”
OK, it’s also the only TV ad for a Leonard Cohen concert I’ve ever seen. In fact, the immense cognitive dissonance generated by a TV
ad for Cohen is the actual reason this is posted.
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<
Update: The same commercial with language and place name changes was broadcast for the Prague concert and is now available on
YouTube.
I also saw an ad broadcast for the American tour, but cannot find it on YouTube.
Leonard Cohen – Bird On A Wire29 (Auckland New Zealand, Jan 22, 2009)
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Leonard Cohen – A Thousand Kisses Deep, Spoken Word Version (London O2 Nov 16, 2008)
These photos and explicative text were originally posted at The Leonard Cohen Dublin Photo Session With Michael Foley. The full
galley of photos, the author’s notes, and the review are still available at that link.30
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These photos were, again, the work of Michael Foley of Michael Foley Photography. The Dublin Concert photos were found in his Flickr
account. Both his web site and his Flickr photostream house a bounty of work that is skillfully and creatively constructed.
This enchanting photo by Karl Smyth shows members of the audience at Leonard Cohen’s Dublin Concert waltzing to – yep – “Take
This Waltz.”
Leonard Cohen Jokes About Sharon Robinson’s Idea For His Drinking Problem (Toronto Canada, June 6,
2008 )
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In this tour, Leonard Cohen has performed at intimate playhouses in Eastern Canada, huge stadiums in Europe, large theaters in
Britain and Eastern Europe, festivals in England, France, Italy, and Switzerland, and, now, four vineyards in Australia. These photos
are from the performance at one of those vineyards, the Feb 1, 2009 concert at Bowral, and were taken by Amanda at Flop Eared Mule.
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The camera angle of this video from another of the winery concerts is suboptimal, but the this segment, beginning with the “Just a kid
with a crazy dream … pharmaceutical recitation … but cheerfulness kept breaking through” sequence, extending through the reference
to the specific location of the concert, and segueing into the performance of Anthem (which is abruptly ended before the song’s
conclusion) nicely demonstrates Leonard Cohen connecting with the audience.
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The Uncut interviews with Cohen’s Tour Team are now online. Links to the full interviews along with a sample excerpt from each are
listed below.
Sharon Robinson
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He’s a devoted workhorse. He works harder than any of the rest of us, and has reserves of energy that no one can quite tell where they
come from. And he is moved by the response of the audience, and the overall sense of an almost spiritual connection that is going on
between him, his work and his audience. The whole thing is a real phenomenon, and Leonard is very moved by that.
He’s a little older. He’s been through a number of personal changes. He’s quite a bit happier than when I knew him 30 years ago. His
voice is lower, but he’s singing great. He’s doing very well. As he’s said, the unexpected lifting of a certain dark cloud, that depression
that has been well-documented, is a big change.
Javier Mas
He really wants to play for the audience. He’s so happy to come back, for the response he finds from the audience. Sometimes, the
audience stand up and clap even before we start. He wants to give them everything, so that makes for a long concert. In Athens,
people were clapping and screaming for one song, so we had to play it too. When you are up there, you forget about your age!
It was great that we started in Canada. We had four nights in a great big beautiful theatre in Toronto, and the second was maybe the
best concert we’ve had. Manchester. Athens was very good, they like Leonard there – “Sisters of Mercy” and “So Long, Marianne” were
inspired by there. And in Lisbon [going to re-check, Spanish pronunciation] it was amazing. The people were singing the songs outside
the concert, and sometimes they sang better than we played! Those were very emotional nights. I think this music is made to be played
in theatres, like our four nights in Manchester, not in festivals. But people want so much to seem him – we don’t even have tickets for
family.
Leif Bodnarchuk31
The first show, Fredericton was a mind blower – the initial audience reaction to Leonard’s presence on stage was amazing. I don’t think
I’ve ever seen such a genuinely enthusiastic reception. I’ve see kids go wild, but this older audience was incredible. Over on stage left,
we were stunned! I don’t think I’ve seen a stage entrance reception that rivals it. The Dublin crowd are my personal running favourite;
they sang the loudest and had the most fun of that leg. And the crowd in Glastonbury was overwhelming. It was a surreal experience.
Call me crazy, but even I got a little emotional!
CHARLEY: Back then, [at Fredericton], Hattie and I weren’t plugged into what to expect. We’d never seen Leonard live before. A
religious experience is an appropriate phrase, for how people see his shows. We would walk on – and it took a while to harden to
being affected by grown men and women crying and sobbing and screaming directly in front of you. But Leonard seems to be
warmed by that. It’s almost like he could part the Red Sea. He lifts up his microphone, and everything settles.
HATTIE: In Fredericton, it was quite overwhelming. Everybody felt it was going to be quite an electric atmosphere. But it was
beyond anything that we’d imagined. And so intimate. That was a very small theatre. I think it was a very smart way of Leonard to
start the tour. Instead of being in an enormous arena with less personal connection, you could really see the faces of the first
twenty rows. It was so tiny, it was like one of those old London theatres. You could almost picture people in Victorian dress.
Leonard immediately connected with people, and his own nerves dissipated within a couple of songs.
CHARLEY: Dublin was raucous, high-energy. We were freezing to death on-stage. It was the coldest I’ve ever been, all of our kneecaps
were going up and down, trying not to completely shudder. It was outdoors at night, and the hardy Irish were swinging and dancing in
the rain to “So Long, Marianne”, knowing all the words. The outside atmosphere and the weather added to a completely different
energy.
Was that raucous energy consistent through the Dublin shows, though?
HATTIE: It was. There were three nights in Dublin, but the second was the first to be booked and officially sold. The first night was
energetic, but the second, with all the die-hards, was absolutely mental.
CHARLEY: The security people got completely squashed and swept out of the way by the tides of people coming towards the front,
insisting on polkaing and waltzing. Cameramen even zoomed in and captured some couples on their knees – one person was
proposing with a ring during “I’m Your Man”. It was crazy.
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HATTIE: Something like “Take This Waltz” is very uplifting. Everybody was singing along to that, and “So Long, Marianne” is quite a
chanty, beer-swilling song.
Bruce Rodgers32
Not necessarily a theme but I took the approach to design the set as an extension of who Leonard is to me, Leonard is a very elegant
gentleman and dresses that way. His music is from the heart and he’s also a great artist. He allows us to see into his heart when he
sings and I wanted the feel of the set to be like him, subtle and silvery grey and translucent, mysterious and full of light at times, dark
and moody at others. My setting this not only gave me the feelings I was after but also gives Anne the ability to tone the space thru out
the evening.
Roscoe Beck33
Well, he’s writing. He’s already got some things written. He’s played me two of the songs. And there are more new songs. I saw him
writing on the plane yesterday, in his notebooks. And he’s talked to me about wanting to do a new record. But it will probably be when
the touring’s done. Just because we still have dates – we’re in Europe until December 1, we’ll break for Christmas, then I think we’re
going to Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia and the Far East, after that will be the US and Western Canada, so there’s at least that much
touring before we can start on a record. That will probably take us to at least October 2009 before we can even think about recording.
New songs.?
Well, you know, these things are always subject to change, and I do know a couple of titles but I wouldn’t want to give them away in
case somebody took them…
Wilfred Langmaid
The subject of the final interview proves a surprising choice. Wilfred Langmaid is described by Uncut thusly:
He’s been a critic for New Brunswick’s English-language newspaper The Daily Gleaner for over 25 years, and written often about
Cohen during that period, including coverage of the first night of the “comeback” tour in Langmaid’s hometown of Fredericton. He also
happens to be an Anglican chaplain.
And, indeed, the interview deals exclusively with the first concert of the tour, which was held in Fredericton. An excerpt follows:
When he appeared on the stage, there was a two-minute sta nding ovation. Not a note was playing. Just the fact that he was there.
We just rose to our feet. He looked out with that nervous, shy smile, and kept bowing and nodding his head; a sheepish grin, but
certainly loving every moment of it. He knew that we were thrilled to have him there. And we certainly knew, based on what he said, but
more importantly what he did musically and artistically, that he was really thrilled to be with us. There must have been some misgivings,
some second thoughts: “Oh, my heaven! I’m really doing this!” But the band were in the pocket right from the get-go. Leonard did well
from the outset, but he seemed a little jittery, for the first couple of songs; he made reference to it. But by the fourth song, “Bird on the
Wire” – that was in the four-spot. The nervousness was gone. He was fully engaged, and just sailing along. He was at his best. The
voice was far stronger than I expected. The energy was strong. He was playful throughout the evening. He was gracious, he was
thinking on his feet. It became clear in hindsight, having read accounts of other shows, that some “ad-libbed” lines were well-rehearsed
– being a “60-year-old kid with a crazy dream…” But other moments were clearly off the cuff. People would say things, respectfully,
between songs, and he would banter back and forth, and it was all very playful. At the start of set two, when he was getting the
keyboard programmed for “Tower of Song”, he pressed a wrong button, and laughed and had to put his glasses on. He was literally
feeling his way. “So Long Marianne” was completely transformed – a totally different cadence, 4/4, not 3/3. He defined it in a different
way, as Dylan would. For those of us who were fanatics, we’d hear those early licks and go: “Oh, yeah!” We’re going to get “Who by
Fire…” “Oh, it’s this. It’s that…” It was a feeling I have not had since Grateful Dead concerts. Just joy. Having written about music since
the late ’70s, this was way up there at the top. We never thought we’d see him again, let alone in our hometown.
Leonard Cohen Celebrates 74th Birthday With 10,000 Of His Closest Fans In Bucharest
The video below does not demonstrate excellent production standards but it does present an excellent experience. In addition to
Cohen’s performance of Famous Blue Raincoat, one can hear, as the video starts, the final bars of the audience singing Happy
Birthday to Leonard Cohen.
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ONCE, The Only Live Cohen Interview During the 2008 Tour34
Brian Johnson interviewed Leonard Cohen for Macleans Magazine June 4, 2008 at Hamilton Place. As far as I can determine, this is the
only live interview Leonard Cohen gave during the 2008 tour. Happily, the entire interview was videotaped and can be viewed below. In
addition, a transcript of the interview can be found at Cohen wore earplugs to a Dylan show? I’ve pasted a couple of excerpts below to
give the flavor of the piece:
A: Well, one of the things was that pesky little financial situation, which totally wiped me out. So I’m very grateful that I had a way
to make a living, because that was indicated in very powerful terms. It wasn’t the prime motivator. Thanks to the help of Robert
Kory, who is unique among lawyers in that he deferred his fees until the situation was resolved, which is not just unusual but
unheard of, I would say, for a lawyer in Los Angeles. So he was able to somehow right the shipwreck. As it turned out, I could have
gotten by. But all the time, even when I was in the monastery at Mt. Baldy, there were times when I would ask myself, “Are you
really never going to get up on a stage again?” It was always unresolved. It would arise. Not daily, not even monthly. But from time
to time, I’d see my guitar. I was still writing songs. But the idea of performing was starting to recede further and further back. One
of the reasons was that I was so wiped out physically by the end of my last tour because I was drinking heavily. I was drinking
about three bottles of wine by the end of the tour.
A: Before every concert. I only drank professionally, I never drank after the concert. I would never drink after intermission. It was a
long tour. It must have been 60 to 70 concerts.
A: I was very nervous. And I liked drinking. And I found this wine, it was Château Latour. Now very expensive. It was even
expensive then. It’s curious with wine. The wine experts talk about the flavour and the bouquet and whether it has legs and the
tannins and the fruit and the symphonies of tastes. But nobody talks about the high. Bordeaux is a wine that vintners have worked
on for about 1,000 years. Each wine has a very specific high, which is never mentioned. Château Latour, I don’t know how I
stumbled on it, but it went with the music, and it went with the concert. I tried to drink it after the tour was over, and I could hardly
get a glass down. It had no resonance whatsoever. It needed the adrenaline of the concert and the music and the atmosphere, the
kind of desperate atmosphere of touring—desperate because I was drinking so much! I had a good time with it for a while, but it did
wreck my health, and I put on about 25 pounds.
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________________________
A: With Anjani?
Q: Yes.
A: It’s a good relationship. I’ve known her for a long, long time. She’s just finished six songs of her own for a new album. She went
to a little cabin in Wyoming for the last month and has written this album. So I’m very anxious to hear it.
Present At Creation: Newspaper Reports Of The First Tour Concerts: Fredericton and Halifax
Globe and Mail.com: He was Fredericton’s man While this is a competent review, it lacks the verve and energy typically found in
the Globe and Mail coverage of Leonard Cohen. I do think this quote, which I extracted from the middle of the article, perhaps the
best short summary of the staging of the night’s performance.
“Onstage more than 2½ hours, Cohen certainly looked his age, a little stooped but dapper in a double-breasted suit and a
fedora, which he removed to take a bow after each song. Cradling a hand-held microphone, he was able to move
energetically around centre stage to interact with his band. He played two sets of eight songs each and four encores,
including 1960s standards such as Suzanne, Bird on the Wire and So Long, Marianne as well as classics from his middle
period in the 1980s and early 1990s such as Everybody Knows, Take This Waltz, Hallelujah and I’m Your Man.”
While the article also notes that “there had been pre-show buzz that another musical collaborator, Cohen’s romantic partner,
Anjani Thomas, would perform, but she did not appear,” Anjani’s decision to remain in LA to work on her own album was
announced at least a week or two beforehand.
Daily Gleaner – Leonard Cohen wows FrederictonWilifred Langmaid provides a comprehensive, interesting review of Cohen’s
performance at the Fredericton Playhouse.
Tower of Song – The Chronicle Herald (Pre-concert)
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THE UNPRECEDENTED response to the news that Montreal-born bard and Canadian music icon Leonard Cohen would be
performing at Halifax’s Rebecca Cohn Auditorium and Glace Bay’s Savoy Theatre proves that his Tower of Song is a prime
piece of real estate.
I’m not sure how the Tower of Song real estate metaphor works either, especially given the depressed housing market these
days, but the tone certainly sounds upbeat. While the Metro ) went with the “sense of humility” theme, the Chronicle Herald led
with a fiscal touchstone:
Tickets sold out rapidly, as the Cohn show grew from a one-night stand into a five-show stint, and the rare East Coast
appearance by this complex and revered performer took on the aura of a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. A quick scan of EBay
sees Cohen’s Cohn tickets going for anywhere from $200 (with one day left in the auction), to a pair of front row centre seats
priced to sell at nearly $1,200.
The article rambles and is a bit disjointed in recounting Cohen’s biography but shines when the writer, Stephen Cooke,
thoughtfully reflects on his own reactions to Cohen’s work.
First he takes Halifax – The Chronicle Herald (Post-concert)Best overall newspaper review (as of 13 May 2008; 5:58 AM). Stephen
Cooke’s report of Leonard Cohen’s Halifax performance, although its headline conveniently overlooks Cohen’s performance the
previous night in Fredericton) is exponentially more insightful and organized than the same writer’s article anticipating the concert.
He writes, for example,
Cohen and his band set the tone with Dance Me to the End of Love, summoning up a Euro-folk-jazz vibe augmented by Javier
Mas’s gypsy guitar and Dino Soldo’s mellow electronic horn. The Montreal singer’s famous baritone came across soft and
seductive, sounding even better than expected and nicely balanced by both the musicians and backup singers Sharon Robinson
and the Webb sisters.
CBC: Cohen delivers fan favourites for tour kickoff in N.B.Despite documenting “the night’s many standing ovations,” the CBC
report of Cohen’s opening night of his 2008 seems somewhat restrained, focusing on his performance of “fan favourites,” and “his
greatest hits.” In a separate line, the CBC notes that ” No new material was showcased.” Much of the piece is taken up with the
concert schedule rather than Cohen’s performance.
Metro – Concert shows Cohen still your manThe Metro blurb on Leonard Cohen’s appearance last night in Halifax is brief but
sweet. The article does, however, conveniently forget that the tour actually opened previously in Fredrericton:
“I hope you won’t be disappointed. Thanks for getting me started again,” added Cohen. His five sold-out nights at the Cohn
come after a 15-year hiatus from arena touring and at the start of a world tour.” (emphasis mine)
The photos and videos first appeared on Leonard Cohen Fan Pages at Facebook.
Leonard Cohen – Dance Me To The End Of Love (Fredericton Canada, 11 May 2008)
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Leonard Cohen inaugurated his 2008 World Tour on 11 May 2008 at the Playhouse in Fredericton, NB, a venue which, according to
Wikipedia, has a capacity of 709 (469 orchestra seats and 240 balcony seats).
Fredericton Skyline
The city of Fredericton, also according to Wikipedia, is located in eastern Canada (see map below) and, in 2005, had a population of
50,535.
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Indeed, why would the first concerts take place in a relatively isolated geographic area and in much smaller venues than those
scheduled during the rest of the Tour (e.g., Toronto, Dublin, Manchester, Montreal, Oslo, Amsterdam, Rome)?
First, it appears significant that the small venues are at the first of the Tour. One also notes that extensive rehearsals by Cohen and his
band have been reported.
Given that Cohen is working on a new album with a significant portion of the concert playlist coming from that collection of new work
and that at least two of the backup singers (The Webb Sisters) haven’t worked with Cohen before, my bet is that the Cohen Tour opens
in Eastern Canada for the same reason a musical comedy opens off-Broadway or in the Poconos – to work out the kinks and polish the
performance before moving it to Broadway – or to bigger stadiums.
The following is an excerpt from an interview with AEG concert promoter Rob Hallett, who played a significant role in making the current
Leonard Cohen Tour a reality:36
[Interviewer:] Leonard Cohen is finishing his UK arena tour – how did you talk him out of retirement?
[Hallett:] It took some time. Leonard was trying to make some of the money back that had been stolen. [Cohen's manager stole
$9.5m (£6.2m) in the 1990s.] At first he said, ‘I don’t know if anyone wants to see me. You must be joking’. We went back and forth
over a couple of years. In the end, I offered to finance the rehearsals and said, ‘we’ll do some warm-up dates in Canada, and
lets see what we’ve got’. So we were about $3m (£2m) in and 16 shows in Canada and we knew that we had a monster on our
hands. When I first put an O2 show on sale everyone said, ‘what? Leonard Cohen in the O2?’ And we sold out three. It’s been a
fantastic success. Everyone who’s seen the show almost without fail is saying this is the best show they’ve ever seen in their lives.
[emphasis mine]
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Readers may recall that DrHGuy, the gracious host of Heck Of A Guy, was criticized for hazarding, in Why The 2008 Leonard Cohen
World Tour Is Opening In Fredericton (a post published the day before the first concert of the Tour) this guess:
… my bet is that the Cohen Tour opens in Eastern Canada for the same reason a musical comedy opens off-Broadway or in the
Poconos – to work out the kinks and polish the performance before moving it to Broadway – or to bigger stadiums.
DrHGuy suggests that “warm-up dates in Canada” and “Fredericton is Leonard Cohen’s off-Broadway” are congruent responses to
“Why The 2008 Leonard Cohen World Tour Opened In Fredericton.”
Ahem
DrHGuy notes that his supposition about the reasons behind the decision to begin the Cohen Tour in smaller venues is hardly an insult
to Fredericton or the other towns in the first leg of the Tour. DrHGuy does, on occasion, indulge in hyperbole in hopes of achieving
comedic effect and apologizes if that was not evident. In any case, given that DrHGuy resides in a town smaller than Fredericton and
that he would be willing to cut off the right arms of numerous other inhabitants of this town if it would result in a Leonard Cohen concert
being held here, the only negative he associates with Fredericton Canada is his own ill-concealed jealousy.
___________________________
1. 18 November 2008: The original intent of this page was to offer a summary of each concert of the Leonard Cohen 2008 World Tour.The death of a loved one shortly
after this site opened and my consequent suspension of routine posting rendered that goal impractical. Instead, the focus has shifted to listing The Best Of The
Leonard Cohen World Tour 2008-2009: the most moving photos, the best recordings of the music, the coolest videos, the odd, the strange, and, as always, much,
much more. Although I have accumulated much of the material already, this task will not be accomplished overnight. On the other hand, it should be fun. [↩]
2. Details, including identities of the perpetrators are available at this Heck Of A Guy post [↩]
3. Special thanks to sturgess66, who pointed out Beck’s chapeau spinning. [↩]
4. Although the Google translation is, as usual, almost comic at points, the language approaches poetry at times, leaving those of us ignorant of Portugese wondering
how lovely this newspaper review of a Cohen concert must be in its native idiom. [↩]
5. Basic information about Leonard Cohen and his relationship with Marianne can be found at Leonard Cohen – The Literary Years. [↩]
6. The exception is the “dry” photo of Cohen and Vega [↩]
7. A few more details about Yasmine’s life and career are available at Leonard Cohen Dedicates Concert To Yasmine [↩]
8. I first heard this felicitous phrase from Marie of Speaking Cohen [↩]
9. Yes, I’m on vacation so I wasn’t planning to post this week, but this shot of Cohen’s concert featured on the marquee of The Wang Theatre caught my eye. That and
some other photos and a review are of such quality that publishing them in a timely manner was a pleasure rather than a task. [↩]
10. See LA Times Next At Leonard Cohen Interview-a-thon [↩]
11. To keep the rankings in context, consider this description of the #1 entry on this “Best of Coachella” list: 1. My Bloody Valentine: My Bloody Valentine was
definitely the most sonically punishing set of the weekend – hands down my favorite performance. Their captivating and nosily melodic (too much of an
oxymoron to let go) presence could be (physically) felt from the farthest ends of the festival grounds. Upon arriving to the festival Sunday morning, each fan was
given a pair of ear plugs, a subtle but necessary warning for what was to come. Frontman Kevin Shield led his pedal-obsessive four-piece through a set of fan
favorites and b-side gems. What separated My Bloody Valentine from every other band this weekend came from their EP title track “You Made Me Realise.” The
relatively short song was painfully expanded by a 15 minute noise attack. The mass hysteria and confusion that hit the crowd during this 15 minutes of chaos is
nearly inexplicable. One person I spoke to described the experience as “swimming in a pool of Jello, if the Jello was made of white noise.” Here’s my best
attempt at explaining the experience: it felt as if I was standing inside of the turbine of a space shuttle taking off into space. The physical push of the sound was
enough to make some fans faint, others scream senselessly, but most importantly, it brought a group of 60,000 people together with a unique experience that few
will ever truly understand. And to think that they went back into the song afterwards, untuned strings and all – that takes a lot of guts in my book. I can only
wonder what Kevin Shields’ parents thought of his band practices when he was growing up. [↩]
12. Yes, I’m on a first name basis with the Webb Sisters. Well, I know their first names – and they know their first names; they just don’t know who I am. [↩]
13. The video should automatically begin just before the desired sequence. Unfortunately, I do not have a practical means by which to automatically stop the video before
the end. The viewer can, of course, simply turn off the player at any point. To see some or all of the video that takes place before the automatic start, drag the indicator
(the circular button on the bottom bar) to the left. [↩]
14. Perhaps his music seems exotic to me because there were few occasions as a youth that I heard the Akai EWI4000 Electric Woodwind or the Axis-64 played in
broadcasts of the Grand Ole Opry. [↩]
15. In the Book of Longing version, the line is not “You’d have to be a man to know” but instead reads, “You’d have to live alone to know.” [↩]
16. Documented by several sources, including the set lists published by the Decider Austin. [↩]
17. See last section of Leonard Cohen Rolling Stone Interview Offers Fragments Of New Songs But Little Else [↩]
18. See Two Very Raw, Unreleased Leonard Cohen Songs “Puppets” And “Book Of Longing” [↩]
19. See The Best Leonard Cohen Song You’ve Never Heard (Probably) [↩]
20. For information about and link to the first interview, scroll down to the heading “Once, The Only Live Cohen Interview During the 2008 Tour” [↩]
21. Like many of Cohen’s songs, poems, and anecdotes, there is an autobiographical basis for the “I took a lot of Prozac, … line. See Leonard Cohen’s List Of
Pharmaceuticals Joke & His Not At All Funny Depression [↩]
22. Cohen had sporadically used similar variations previously but this became routine during this period. [↩]
23. Many of the images in the composite were adapted from photos found at LeonardCohenFiles. [↩]
24. The UK is counted as one country. [↩]
25. Cohen’s three-hour set masterpiece by Jeremy Miles. Daily Echo 12 November 2008 [↩]
26. Leonard Cohen at the Brighton Centre By Charlotte Taylor. Crawley Observer 22 December 2008 [↩]
27. Friday 14/11/08 Leonard Cohen @ The O2 Arena, London by Jon Bye. Gigwise. November 19, 2008 [↩]
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28. All the videos in this post are set to begin just before the desired sequence. Unfortunately, I do not have a practical means by which to automatically stop the video
before the end. The viewer can, of course, simply turn off the player at any point. To see some or all of the video that takes place before the automatic start, drag the
indicator (the circular button on the bottom bar) to the left. [↩]
29. Note: The lyrics Cohen sings here are not the same as those heard on the recorded versions. Cohen has, however, frequently introduced new verses to this song.
There is a discussion of this and some examples of previous changes in the lyrics as well as a general examination of Like A Bird On The Wire at Like A Flock Of
Birds On The Wire [↩]
30. Alternative Views
If the above gallery of photos does not behave well on your computer (although it worked well when I tested it, it is a new gizmo, so …), try one of these views of the
same shots:
Site Map
Leonard Cohen Directory And Custom Search
Leonard Cohen Custom Search Explained
Best Of Leonard Cohen World Tour 2008-2009
Birthdays Of Leonard Cohen And Friends
Blog
About LeonardCohenSearch
Contact
Leonard Cohen News Topics
Custom Search
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One of my favorite Cohen songs, "Do I Have To Dance All Night" was performed many times in concerts but was never released in
the US
As part of my crusade to popularize this song, I've cobbled together 2 videos - one for the semi-funky 1976 version with Laura
Brannigan and one for the 1980 more gypsy, less disco version - that kinda sorta fit the music.
Both videos include links to keys to the sources of the clips and the identities of the backup singers and others who are featured.
The complete story of "Do I Have To Dance All Night" is available at The Best Leonard Cohen Song You've Never Heard
(Probably).
For Anjani's July 10th birthday, I put together a video of some of my favorites of her songs, photos, and excerpts from Heck Of A
Guy posts: Happy Birthday, Anjani
Related Sites
Anjani – Heck of a Guy
Anjani Site
Dear Heather
Jennifer Warnes Site
Leonard Cohen: I’m Your Man
Sharon Robinson Site
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Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah - Mood Music For Watchmen SuperHeroic Sex Scene
Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah In Zack Snyder’s Watchmen - Bizarre, Sublime, Nuked The Fridge?
Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah As Watchmen Sex Scene Soundtrack - Debate Continues
The fastest, easiest way to find and share the latest information about Leonard Cohen.
Click to view
LeonardCohenSearch (LCS) is produced by DrHGuy, who also posts at Heck of a Guy. LCS is - on a good day - a work in
progress.
You can help. For example, suggest web sites to be added to the search list, slam a currently searched web site with a
recommendation to drop it, let me know if there is a problem with the site, send me a link to that essay on Leonard Cohen's
favorite jokes, ...
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